Title: Sheep Grazing Behavior * * * * Sheep Fencing
1Sheep Grazing Behavior
2Sheep Grazing Behavior
- Grazing animals are looking for green plant
material - Order of preference is
- new green leaves
- older green leaves
- green stems
- dry leaves
- finally dry stems
- Grazing animals are also looking for palatable
plants
3Sheep Grazing Behavior
- Sheep have narrower mouths, more flexible lips
than cattle - can be more selective - individual
bites - Ruminants swallow their food as soon as it is
lubricated - After consuming a certain amount, they rest
ruminate - Cattle usually graze for four to nine hours a day
- Sheep and goats for nine to 11 hours a day
- Sheep rest and ruminate more than cattle
- 7 to 10 hours a day for sheep
- 4 to 9 hours a day for cattle.
4Sheep Grazing Behavior
- Sheep graze more rugged terrain than cattle.
- Sheep reluctant to graze areas with natural
predator cover - Sheep may walk from three to five kilometers for
water (depending on topography) - Greater distance to water more energy and time
needed to satisfy sheeps requirements. - Sheep need 7.5 to 10 litres of water per day
5Sheep Grazing Behavior
- Livestock seek shade and cool during hot summer
periods - excessive grazing under trees and in riparian
areas. - Livestock overuse dry southern exposures in
Spring, then switch to riparian and shaded areas
during hotter times - North-facing slopes usually remain underused.
- Sheep have strong flocking instinct
- Maintain social spacing and orientation in pens
as well as pasture. - Breed, stocking rate, topography, vegetation,
shelter and distance to water may influence this
instinct - Isolation of individual sheep usually brings
about signs of anxiety and may cause the sheep to
try to escape. - Sheep tend to follow one another
- grazing, bedding down, reacting to obstacles and
feeding.
6Multi-Species Grazing
- Different animals prefer different forages
- Cattle diets consist primarily of grass.
- Sheep tend to prefer forbs over grass and browse
- Goat and deer diets contain large amounts of
browse compared to cattle and sheep diets. - Because of the different dietary preference,
mixing kinds of livestock under certain
conditions is possible, however - forage source must have necessary diversity and
production for animals to meet dietary
preferences - cattle and sheep will compete if grazed together
in predominately grass pasture - Grazing cattle and sheep together will place
increased management requirements on operator - Fencing and other infrastructure needed to handle
two kinds of livestock are different - Herd health issues (recognizing, treating and
dealing with sick animals) will also be
different.
7 Relative Proportions of Grass, Forbs andBrowse
in the Diets of Cattle, Sheep and Goats
-
- Kind of Forage Cattle Sheep Goats
- Grass 60 40 20
- Forbs 20 40 30
- Browse 20 20 50
8Sheep Production Cycle
- The most critical periods in the sheep production
cycle are - Breeding season through very early pregnancy
- Late pregnancy through the neonatal period
- Lactation
- Weaning
- Selection of breeding season dictates when each
of the critical periods falls in relation to the
forage cycle - Nutrients in forages are highest soon after the
forage emerges and before it matures - Animals with low production potential or with low
nutritional requirements (dry, non-pregnant
adults) should graze mature forage - Animals in breeding, late pregnancy or lactation
periods, or newly weaned lambs, should use
pasture producing high quality forage
9Bloat Management
- Bloat
- ruminants
- gas produced during fermentation
- becomes trapped inside rumen
- normally expelled - eructation or belching
- rumen distension exerts physical pressure
- respiratory and circulatory systems
- death
10Bloat Management
- Pasture bloat
- rapid intake of immature green legumes (alfalfa
or clovers) - when plants are in a vegetative state
- contribute high levels of ruminally degradable
protein - high levels of carbohydrates
- digested quite rapidly
- This causes
- drop in rumen pH
- increase in gas production
- binding of protein molecules into surface film or
froth over ruminal contents - consequently, trapped gas
11Bloat Management
- Bloat - reduced through pasture management
methods - plant pastures - no more than 50 percent alfalfa
or clover - plant non-bloating legumes
- birdsfoot trefoil
- sainfoin
- cicer milkvetch
- (AC Grazland is an alfalfa variety that can
reduce but not eliminate bloating) - fill animals on dry roughage or grass pastures
before turning them out onto legume pastures - move livestock onto alfalfa at mid-day instead of
morning (when the dew is gone) or evening - avoid a feast and famine routine of grazing
management - encourage even, regular consumption
- not a grazing pattern of engorgement
12Birdsfoot Trefoil
13Sainfoin
14Cicer Milkvetch
15Bloat Management
- Birdsfoot trefoil is less likely to cause bloat
than alfalfa and many types of clovers - Not because it does not have a high protein
content - but, because the rate of digestion is
considerably slower - grasses do not usually cause bloat, because the
protein content is lower than legumes.
16Bloat Management
- Minimize bloat by turning animals onto alfalfa
that has reached bloom stage or later - more mature alfalfa less risk of bloat
- once alfalfa has flowered, risk of bloat greatly
reduced - Bloat more prevalent if animals eat only upper
portion of the plants, (high in rapidly
degradable protein) - grazing animals at high stocking rates reduces
problem - Provide animals with grass pasture, hay, crop
residue or grain along with legume (while on
pasture) - reduces consumption of legume.
- Graze in rotation, using different grass and
legume pastures, or strip-graze (with electric
fencing) - force animals to eat most of plant material
rather than just succulent top growth.
17Sheep Grazing Behavior
- Grazing animals are looking for green plant
material - Order of preference is
- new green leaves
- older green leaves
- green stems
- dry leaves
- finally dry stems
- Grazing animals are also looking for palatable
plants
18Bloat Management
- Other management techniques to reduce the
likelihood of pasture bloat in sheep - Check them closely a couple hours after turnout
(especially, early in grazing season or to a new
pasture with significant legume content -
- Poloxalene is a nonionic surfactant
- helps prevent foam production in rumen
- main constituent in bloat preventive mineral
blocks for cattle - Poloxalene feeding to sheep
- rate of two to three grams/head/day
- If cattle bloat block blocks are used
- check Copper levels
- high levels of copper copper toxicity in sheep
19Copper Levels
- Sheep require about 5 ppm (parts per million or
mg/kg) of Cu in total diet - Toxicity can occur at levels above 25 ppm
- 3 kg diet intake requires 15 mg Cu and allows for
max of 75 mg - Cattle require about 10 ppm of Cu in their diet
and can tolerate Cu levels ten times higher than
sheep - Non-ruminants, such as pigs and chickens,
tolerate even higher levels of Cu - Growing pigs often fed 100 to 250 ppm to improve
performance - According to the Salt Institute, toxic level of
Cu in diet of chickens ranges from 250 to 800ppm.
20Bloat Management
- Treat bloated sheep with care.
- build-up of pressure in rumen can actually cause
partial collapse of lungs - Furthermore, blood from body is forced out of
body cavity to extremities and can cause a form
of acidosis - Stressing these animals complicates situation.
- Catch animals use stomach tube to help release
free ruminal gas. - Mild agitation of ruminal contents can aid in
release of trapped gas bubbles - Mineral or vegetable oils can be used as
antifoaming agents and help release gas. - Treatment with commercially available
anti-bloating agents can also be done at this
time.
21Bloat Management
- Another bloat management tool is rumenotomy
- puncturing rumen - located high on left side of
lumbar region - in severe, life-threatening situations
- procedure not for weak stomached
- pressure results in expulsion of significant
amount of rumen contents - area will need cleaning (suturing) after
rumenotomy - trochar and cannula
- genetic propensity to bloat susceptibility (?)
- some breeds or lines appear more susceptible to
bloat - may be practical to cull individuals with bloat
history
22Using Pasture to Lower Costs
- Lambing on pasture can be labor saving
- Drift lamb on the edge of Spring and Summer
- Before lambing, graze paddocks quickly - get
ahead of explosive Spring flush grass growth - If pasture conditions allow, early turnout works
- grass growing at rate that provides ewes enough
nutrients while lambing - as demands increase, grass growth increasing
- minimize clipping expense
23Using Pasture to Lower Costs
- Drift lambing involves
- drifting (moving) pregnant ewes out of paddock
every few days - leaving ewes that have lambed behind.
- ewes stay in the same paddock with their lambs
for 30-50 days - less likelihood of lambs getting orphaned.
- shoot for 5 ewes/acre
- Lambing on pasture reduces stress level of ewes
- plenty of space to have lambs away from the rest
of flock - yet, security of having flock close
- relative security from predators
24Using Pasture to Lower Costs
- Main challenges to pasture lambing are weather
and predators - Newborn lambs are particularly susceptible to
cold and rain - tents and other portable structures provide
shelter - shepherds should develop protocols
- involving dextrose and warming - when lambs get
chilled - predators always big problem coyotes, wolves,
dogs, eagles - deal with them
- guard dogs - Pyrenees, Anatolian, and Marema
- extra vigilance
- animal control
25Using Pasture to Lower Costs
- Drift lambing allows manager to focus predator
and newborn management - Newborn lambs especially vulnerable to predation
and hypothermia - with drift lambing
- manager can allocate guard dogs
- manage lambs in poor weather more easily
- newest born lambs are separated from older ones
- Set stocking another form of pasture lambing
- spreads out newborns and mothers over many
paddocks - focused management more difficult.
26Using Pasture to Lower Costs
- Keep lambing groups together for 30-50 days after
lambing - Then, combine ewes and their lambs into two big
groups - Begin rotationally grazing
- Separate ewes with triplets from those with only
singles or twins - Allow the triplet group access to pasture first
and then follow with the other group. - Aim for a density of around 100 ewes per acre
since this level of density leads to good grazing
pressure
- After 30-50 days of staying in one
27Using Pasture to Lower Costs
- Utilize small herd of beef cows (20) to help with
both parasite and grass management on sheep
pasture - Sheep very sensitive to parasites
- level of parasites on sheep pastures builds up
over time - Cattle and sheep are not susceptible to same
parasites - alternating cattle and sheep grazing can help
lower parasite load - This dual species grazing is effective if
- grazing is alternated over the course of the year
- sheep and cattle should not graze in the same
pasture at the same time if parasite control is
goal - Cattle also useful for cleaning up overgrown
pastures in the late Spring
28Using Pasture to Lower Costs
- Grazing turnips can help the manager get through
the Fall stall of lamb growth -
- Goal - finish lambs - one growing season -
without grain - tough to do using only native pastures
- normally, native grass-fed lambs do not grow well
(Fall-stall) in Oct-Nov - Turnips seeded into plowed hayfields that need
renovation - early July - grazed lightly in late August and
September - Lambs graze them heavily through Oct and Nov
- eat all of the turnip tops and some of the roots
- Lambs grow well on turnips
- forage quality is excellent and palatable
- Turnips also extend ewe grazing into the winter
29Using Pasture to Lower Costs
- Ewes in good condition (3.5 BCS) will do well
grazing stockpiled forage - even if they need to dig through snow
- 6-8 inches of snow covering 6-10 inches of
stockpiled forage growth can be managed easily - snow will provide the sheep with all the water
they need - If the snow is too deep, place round bales in the
pasture - ewes do well with outside feeding
- do not waste much feed
-
- Small amount of wasted forage serves as a nice
place for ewes to lamb in the Spring
30Sheep Fencing-Irrigated Pasture
- Sheep more difficult to control with electric
fencing than any other livestock species - Training is critical if sheep are to be
controlled - And, fence design must be more elaborate
- Sheep can be controlled on irrigated pasture
- 3 hot wires at 8-10, 18-20, and 28-30 inches
- 4 hot wires at 8-10, 15-17, 24-26, and 34-36
inches - Posts are generally spaced 40 to 50 feet apart.
31Sheep Fencing - Rangeland
- Five wires are generally required to effectively
control sheep on rangeland - 5 wires at 6, 13, 21, 30 and 40 inches
- 2nd, 3rd, and 5th wires hot
- 4th wire is a ground wire
- 1st wire (bottom wire) is switchable
- when soil moisture is adequate this wire is hot
- when soil moisture is lacking this is switched to
additional ground wire - Posts typically 40 to 50 feet apart.
32Sheep Fencing Predator fences
- Several fence designs protect sheep from
predation - Even temporary electric fences help
- A simple design consists of
- 3 hot wires mounted on plastic off-set brackets
- attached to posts of existing woven wire/barbed
wire fence - hot wires are installed at heights of 4, 22, and
42 inches. - More elaborate designs are often needed
- 9-wire high-tensile fence design (effective vs-
dog and coyote - install wires _at_ 5, 11, 17, 23, 30, 37, 44, 52, 60
inches - every other wire is hot (including both top and
bottom wires) - every non-hot wire becomes a part of ground
- wood posts spaced 75 -100 feet
- fiberglass stays installed at 20 foot intervals
33Sheep Fencing
34Sheep Fencing